|  1981 by topic | 
        
        
         | Subject:  Archaeology –  Architecture –  Art –  Aviation –  Comics –  Film –  Home video –  Literature ( Poetry) –  Meteorology –  Music ( Country,  Metal) –  Rail transport –  Radio –  Science –  Spaceflight –  Sports –  Television –  Video gaming | 
        
        
         | Countries:  Australia –  Canada –  People's Republic of China –  Ecuador –  France –  Germany –  Greece –  India –  Ireland –  Israel –  Italy –  Japan –  Luxembourg –  Malaysia –  Mexico –  New Zealand –  Norway –  Pakistan –  Philippines –  Singapore –  South Africa–  Soviet Union –  UK –  USA –  Zimbabwe | 
        
        
         | Leaders:  Sovereign states –  State leaders –  Religious leaders –  Law | 
        
        
         | Categories:  Births –  Deaths –  Works –  Introductions –  Establishments –  Disestablishments –  Awards | 
        
        
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       Year 1981 (MCMLXXXI) was a  common year starting on Thursday (link displays the 1981  Gregorian calendar).
       Events of 1981
       January
       
        - January - The subterranean  Sarawak chamber is discovered in  Borneo.
 
        -  January 1 - Greece enters the  European Community, which later becomes the European Union.
 
       
       
        
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        -  January 1 - Palau becomes self-governing.
 
        -  January 5 - Margaret Thatcher carried out a  Cabinet reshuffle, sacking  Norman St. John-Stevas.
 
        -  January 6 - Brazilian double decker boat Novo Amapo capsized Amazon River, Belem de Cajari,  Macapa, Brazil, 230 killed.
 
        -  January 13 - Donna Griffiths, a schoolgirl in  Pershore,  Worcestershire, UK, begins an uncontrollable series of  sneezes that end  September 16, 1983 - after 978 days.
 
        -  January 16 -  Protestant gunmen shoot and wound  Bernadette Devlin McAliskey and her husband.
 
        -  January 17 - Former Philippine President  Ferdinand Marcos lifted  Martial Law.
 
        -  January 19 - United States and Iranian officials sign an agreement to release 52 American  hostages after 14 months of  captivity.
 
        -  January 20 - Ronald Reagan succeeds Jimmy Carter, becoming the 40th President of the United States. Minutes later, Iran releases the 52 Americans held for 444 days, ending the  Iran hostage crisis.
 
        -  January 21 - The first  De Lorean DMC-12 automobile, a  stainless steel  sports car with  gull-wing doors, rolls off the  production line in  Dunmurry, Northern Ireland.
 
        -  January 22 -  Fowzi Nejad, sole survivor of the terrorists from the  Iranian Embassy siege in London, pleads guilty to manslaughter of two hostages and gets jailed for life.
 
        -  January 24 - The British Labour Party special  conference at  Wembley decides that  leadership elections should be by  electoral college.
 
        -  January 25 - Four former Labour cabinet ministers ( Roy Jenkins,  Shirley Williams,  William Rodgers and  David Owen) issue the  Limehouse Declaration, leading to the formation of the  Social Democratic Party.
 
       
       February
       
        
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        -  February 4 -  Gro Harlem Brundtland becomes the  Prime Minister of Norway.
 
        -  February 8 - nineteen fans of  Olympiacos FC and two fans of  AEK Athens died and 54 injured after a stampede at the Karaiskaki Stadium in  Pireus, possibly because Gate 7 did not open immediately after the end of the game.
 
        -  February 9 - Polish Prime Minister  Józef Pinkowski resigns and is replaced by General  Wojciech Jaruzelski.
 
        -  February 10 - A fire at the  Las Vegas Hilton  hotel- casino kills 8 and injures 198.
 
        -  February 13 - Rupert Murdoch buys  The Times and  The Sunday Times for £12 million.
 
        -  February 14 -  Stardust fire: a fire at the Stardust nightclub in  Artane, Dublin, Ireland in the early hours killed 48 and injured 214
 
        -  February 14 - Australia withdraws recognition of the  Pol Pot regime in Cambodia.
 
        -  February 23 -  Antonio Tejero, with members of the  Guardia Civil, enters the  Spanish Congress of Deputies and stops the session where  Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo is about to be named president of the government. The  coup d'état fails thanks to King  Juan Carlos.
 
        -  February 24 - A powerful, magnitude 6.7 earthquake hits Athens, killing 16 people, injuring thousands and destroying several buildings, mostly in  Corinth and the nearby towns of  Loutraki,  Kiato and  Xylokastro.
 
       
       March
       
        
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        -  March 1 -  Bobby Sands, a  Provisional Irish Republican Army member, begins a  hunger strike for  political status in  Long Kesh prison (he dies  May 5, the first of 10 men).
 
        -  March 6 - After 19 years hosting the  CBS Evening News,  Walter Cronkite signs off for the last time.
 
        -  March 10 - Sir  Geoffrey Howe announces the British budget, which raises taxes in the middle of a recession.
 
        -  March 11 - Chilean military dictator  Augusto Pinochet is sworn in as  President of Chile for another 8-year term.
 
        -  March 19 - Three workers are killed and 5 injured during a test of the Space Shuttle Columbia.
 
        -  March 26 - The British  Social Democratic Party was launched at the Connaught Rooms in London.
 
        -  March 29 - The first London Marathon starts with 7,500 runners.
 
        -  March 30 - U.S. President Ronald Reagan is  shot in the chest outside a Washington, D.C. hotel by  John Hinckley, Jr.. Two police officers and Press Secretary  James Brady are also wounded.
 
        -  March 31 - The  53rd Academy Awards, hosted by  Johnny Carson, are held at the  Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles.  Robert Redford's directorial debut in  Ordinary People wins  Best Picture and  Best Director.
 
       
       April
       
        
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        -  April 1 -  Daylight saving time is introduced in the USSR.
 
        -  April 2 -  Tony Benn announces that he will challenge  Denis Healey for the Deputy Leadership of the British Labour Party.
 
        -  April 4 - UK pop group  Bucks Fizz win the  Eurovision Song Contest 1981 with the song,  Making Your Mind Up.
 
        -  April 10 - IRA hunger-striker  Bobby Sands wins the  Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election.
 
        -  April 11 -  Brixton riot (1981): Rioters in  South London throw petrol bombs, attack police and loot shops.
 
        -  April 12 - The  Space Shuttle program:  Space Shuttle Columbia ( John Young,  Robert Crippen) launches on the  STS-1 mission, returning to Earth on  April 14.
 
        -  April 15 - The Australian Foreign Minister Andrew Peacock resigns from the cabinet, accusing Prime Minister Fraser of gross disloyalty.
 
        -  April 18 - A  Minor League baseball game between the  Rochester Red Wings and the  Pawtucket Red Sox at  McCoy Stadium in  Pawtucket, Rhode Island, becomes the  longest professional baseball game in history: 8 hours and 25 minutes/33 innings (the 33rd inning is not played until  June 23).
 
        -  April 18 - The rock band  Yes splits up (regrouping in 1983).
 
        -  April 24 -  French presidential election: A first-round runoff results between  Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and  François Mitterrand.
 
       
       
        
       
       May
       
        
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        - May -  Daniel K. Ludwig abandons the  Jari project in the Amazon Basin.
 
        -  May 1 - Start of the new  Chilean pension system, based on private  pension funds.
 
        -  May 6 - A jury of architects and sculptors unanimously selects  Maya Lin's design for the  Vietnam Veterans Memorial from 1,421 other entries.
 
        -  May 7 - The  Greater London Council election results in a small Labour majority. On  May 8,  Ken Livingstone becomes Leader of the Council.
 
        -  May 10 - In the second round of the presidential elections in France,  François Mitterrand beats  Valéry Giscard d'Estaing.
 
        -  May 10 - In Italy a popular referendum rejects the abrogation of the law allowing abortion.
 
        -  May 13 - Pope John Paul II is  shot and nearly killed by  Mehmet Ali Ağca, a Turkish gunman, as he enters  St. Peter's Square in Rome to address a general audience.
 
        -  May 21 - In France, Socialist  François Mitterrand becomes President.
 
        -  May 25 - In Riyadh, the  Gulf Cooperation Council is created between Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
 
        -  May 30 - Bangladesh President  Ziaur Rahman is assassinated in  Chittagong.
 
       
       June
       
        
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        -  June 6 -  Bihar train disaster: Seven coaches of an overcrowded passenger train fall off the tracks into the River Kosi in  Bihar, India; about 800 die.
 
        -  June 12 -  Raiders of the Lost Ark, featuring Star Wars actor  Harrison Ford as adventure-seeking archaeologist Indiana Jones, is released in movie theaters.
 
        -  June 7 - The  Israeli Air Force destroys Iraq's  Osirak nuclear reactor.
 
        -  June 12 -  Major League Baseball goes on  strike, forcing the cancellation of 38 percent of the schedule.
 
        -  June 13 - At the  Trooping the Colour ceremony in London,  Marcus Sarjeant fires six blank shots at Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom.
 
        -  June 22 - Iranian president  Abolhassan Banisadr is deposed.
 
        -  June 29 - Morris Edwin Robert, armed with a machine gun, holds hostages in the FBI section at the Atlanta, Georgia Federal Building. After 3 hours the hostages are rescued and Robert is shot (dead?).
 
       
       July
       
        
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        -  July 2 - The  Wonderland Gang was brutally murdered in a massacre that involved  Eddie Nash.
 
        -  July 3 - The  Toxteth riots start after a mob save a youth from being arrested.
 
        -  July 8 - California Governor  Jerry Brown, faced with a  Mediterranean fruit fly infestation, chooses to delay the aerial spraying of  malathion, in favour of continuing ground-based eradication efforts.
 
        -  July 10 -  Mahathir bin Mohamad became the 4th  prime minister of Malaysia.
 
        -  July 17 -  Hyatt Regency walkway collapse: Two skywalks filled with people at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in  Kansas City, Missouri collapse into a crowded atrium lobby, killing 114.
 
        -  July 17 - Israeli aircraft bomb Beirut,  destroying multi-storey apartment blocks containing the offices of  PLO associated groups, killing approximately 300 civilians and resulting in worldwide condemnation and a U.S. embargo on the export of aircraft to Israel.
 
        -  July 19 - The  1981 Springbok Tour commences in New Zealand, amid controversy over the support of Apartheid.
 
        -  July 21 - Tohui The Panda, is born in  Chapultepec Zoo in Mexico, DF. It is the first Panda to ever be born and survive in  captivity outside of China.
 
        -  July 29 -  Lady Diana Spencer marries Charles, Prince of Wales.
 
       
       August
       
        -  August 1 -  MTV (Music Television) is launched on cable television in the United States.
 
        -  August 3 - The  Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) goes on strike.
 
        -  August 5 - Ronald Reagan fires 11,359  striking  air-traffic controllers who ignored his order for them to return to work.
 
        -  August 7 - The  Washington Star ceases all operations after 128 years of publication.
 
        -  August 19 -  Gulf of Sidra incident (1981): Libyan leader  Muammar al-Gaddafi sends 2  Sukhoi Su-22 fighter jets to intercept 2 U.S. fighters over the  Gulf of Sidra. The American jets destroy the Libyan fighters.
 
        -  August 19 - U.S. President Ronald Reagan appoints the first female U.S. Supreme Court Justice,  Sandra Day O'Connor.
 
        -  August 24 -  Mark David Chapman is sentenced to 20 years to life imprisonment after being convicted of murdering John Lennon in  Manhattan eight months ago.
 
        -  August 28 - South African troops invade Angola.
 
        -  August 31 - A bomb explodes at the  U.S. Air Force base in Ramstein,  West Germany, injuring 20 people.
 
       
       September
       
        
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        -  September 4 - An  explosion at a mine in  Záluží, Czechoslovakia, kills 65 people.
 
        -  September 10 - Picasso's painting "Guernica" is moved from  New York to Madrid.
 
        -  September 11 - A small plane crashes into the Swing Auditorium in  San Bernardino damaging the venue beyond repair.
 
        -  September 14 - Margaret Thatcher appoints  Cecil Parkinson as Chairman of the Conservative Party.
 
        -  September 15 - The  John Bull becomes the oldest operable  steam locomotive in the world, at 150 years old, when it operates under its own power outside Washington, DC.
 
        -  September 16 - In Britain, the  Liberal Party Assembly votes for an electoral pact with the new  Social Democratic Party.
 
        -  September 18 - France abolishes  capital punishment.
 
        -  September 19 - The second Wranslide occurs in  New South Wales, with the Wran government re-elected for a third term with an increased majority, and reducing the  Liberal Party of Australia to just 14 members in the Legislative Assembly.
 
        -  September 19 -  Simon and Garfunkel perform  The Concert in Central Park, a free concert in New York in front of approximately a half a million people.
 
        -  September 20 - Belize becomes independent.
 
        -  September 25 -  Sandra Day O'Connor takes her seat as the first female justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. The Rolling Stones begin their tour in support of  Tattoo You at  JFK Stadium in Philadelphia.
 
        -  September 26 - First flight of the  Boeing 767 airliner.
 
        -  September 27 - TGV high speed rail service between Paris and  Lyon, France begins.
 
        -  September 27 -  Denis Healey retained the post of Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, beating  Tony Benn by 50.426% to 49.574%.
 
       
       
        
       
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        -  October 6 - Egyptian president  Anwar Sadat is assassinated during a parade by army members who were part of the Egyptian  Islamic Jihad organization; they opposed his negotiations with Israel.
 
        -  October 10 - The Ministry for Education of Japan issues the  jōyō kanji.
 
        -  October 10 - A  Provisional IRA bomb at  Chelsea Barracks in London kills a woman pensioner.
 
        -  October 13 -  James Tobin wins the  Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.
 
        -  October 14 - Vice President  Hosni Mubarak is elected President of Egypt 1 week after Anwar Sadat's assassination.
 
        -  October 15 - The  heavy metal band  Metallica forms.
 
        -  October 16 - Gas explosions occurred coal mine at Hokutan  Yūbari,  Hokkaidō, Japan, killing 93.
 
        -  October 21 -  Andreas Papandreou becomes  Prime Minister of Greece.
 
        -  October 22 - The founding congress of the  Nepal Workers and Peasants Organization faction led by Hareram Sharma and D.P. Singh begins.
 
        -  October 22 -  Liberal candidate  Bill Pitt wins the  Croydon North West byelection, the first election win by the Liberal- S.D.P. Alliance.
 
        -  October 26 - An IRA bomb in a  Wimpy Bar in  Oxford Street, London, kills a bomb disposal expert.
 
        -  October 27 - A  Soviet submarine runs aground oustide the  Karlskrona, Sweden military base.
 
       
       November
       
        
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        -  November 1 - Antigua and Barbuda gain  independence from the United Kingdom.
 
        -  November 9 - Edict No 81-234 abolishes slavery in Mauritania.
 
        -  November 12 -  STS-2: Space Shuttle Columbia, piloted by  Joe Engle and  Richard Truly, lifts off for its second mission.
 
        -  November 12 - The Church of England  General Synod voted to admit women to holy orders.
 
        -  November 13 - The first  Friday the 13th event is held by motorcyclists in  Port Dover,  Ontario, Canada.
 
        -  November 16 - Luke and Laura marry on the U.S. soap opera General Hospital; it is the highest-rated hour in daytime television history.
 
        -  November 18 - COMDEX Fall, IBM Introduced the IBM PC. Scientific Solutions announces the first PC add-in cards.
 
        -  November 23 -  Iran-Contra scandal: Ronald Reagan signs the  top secret National Security Decision Directive 17 (NSDD-17), giving the  Central Intelligence Agency the authority to recruit and support  Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
 
        -  November 25- November 26 - A group of  mercenaries led by  Mike Hoare take over  Mahe airport in the Seychelles in a  coup attempt. Most of the mercenaries escape by a commandeered  Air India passenger jet; 6 are later arrested.
 
        -  November 26 - Former cabinet minister  Shirley Williams won the  Crosby  by-election, becoming the first elected  S.D.P. MP.
 
        -  November 30 - Cold War: In Geneva, representatives from the United States and the Soviet Union begin to negotiate intermediate-range nuclear weapon reductions in Europe (the meetings end inconclusively on Thursday,  December 17).
 
       
       
        
       
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        -  December 1 - A Yugoslavian  DC-9 crashes into a mountain while approaching  Ajaccio Airport in  Corsica, killing 178.
 
        -  December 4 - South Africa grants "homeland"  Ciskei independence (not recognized outside South Africa).
 
        -  December 5 - American general  James Lee Dozier is kidnapped in  Verona by Italian  Red Brigades.
 
        -  December 8 - The  No. 21 Mine explosion in  Whitwell, Tennessee kills 13.
 
        -  December 8 -  Arthur Scargill became President-elect of the  National Union of Mineworkers.
 
        -  December 9 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania police officer Daniel Faulkner is shot and killed during a routine traffic stop of a vehicle driven by  William Cook,  Mumia Abu-Jamal's younger brother.
 
        -  December 10 - During the Ministerial Session of the  North Atlantic Council in Brussels, Spain signes the  Protocol of Accession to NATO.
 
       
       
        -  December 11 -  El Mozote massacre: In El Salvador, army units kill 900 civilians.
 
        -  December 13 -  Wojciech Jaruzelski declares  martial law in Poland, to prevent the dismantling of the communist system by  Solidarity.
 
        -  December 15 - A  car bomb destroys the Iraqi  Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, killing 61 people. Syrian intelligence is blamed.
 
        -  December 20 - The  Penlee lifeboat disaster occurs off the coast of South-West  Cornwall.
 
        -  December 28 - The first American  test-tube baby,  Elizabeth Jordan Carr, is born in  Norfolk, Virginia.
 
        -  December 31 -  Coup d'état in Ghana removes  President  Hilla Limann's  PNP  government and replaces it with the  PNDC led by  Flight Lieutenant  Jerry Rawlings.
 
       
       Undated
       
        - Millennium reenactment of the translation of Saint  Edward the Martyr's relics from  Wareham to  Shaftesbury.
 
        - Public funding of election Campaigns introduced in  New South Wales, Australia.
 
        - The  State Council of the People's Republic of China listed the four cities (Beijing,  Hangzhou,  Suzhou and  Guilin) where the protection of historical and cultural heritage as well as natural scenery should be treated as a priority project.
 
        - Cuba suffers a major outbreak of  Dengue fever, with 344,203 cases.  
 
        -  Luxor AB Presents the  ABC 800 computer.
 
       
       Ongoing
       
       Deaths
       January-March
       
        -  January 5 -  Harold C. Urey, American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1893)
 
        -  January 5 -  Lanza del Vasto, Italian-born philosopher, poet, and activist (b. 1901)
 
        -  January 6 -  A. J. Cronin, Scottish novelist (b. 1896)
 
        -  January 10 -  Katherine Alexander, American actress (b. 1898)
 
        -  January 23 -  Samuel Barber, American composer (b. 1910)
 
        -  January 31 -  Cozy Cole, American jazz drummer (b. 1909)
 
        -  February 1 -  Geirr Tveitt, Norwegian composer (b. 1908)
 
        -  February 9 -  Bill Haley, American musician (b. 1925)
 
        -  February 15 -  Karl Richter, German conductor (b. 1926)
 
        -  February 18 -  John Knudsen Northrop, American airplane manufacturer (b. 1895)
 
        -  February 20 - Baron  Nicolas de Gunzburg, French magazine editor and playboy (b. 1904)
 
        -  February 26 -  Howard Hanson, American composer (b. 1896)
 
        -  February 27 -  Jacob H. Gilbert, American politician (b. 1920)
 
        -  March 6 -  George Geary, English cricketer (b. 1893)
 
        -  March 7 -  Kiril Kondrashin, Russian conductor (b. 1914)
 
        -  March 9 -  Max Delbrück, German biologist, recipient of the  Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1906)
 
        -  March 23 -  Beatrice Tinsley, English astronomer (b. 1941)
 
        -  March 30 -  DeWitt Wallace, American magazine publisher (b. 1889)
 
        -  March 31 -  Frank Tieri, American gangster (b. 1904)
 
       
       April-June
       
        -  April 3 -  Juan Trippe, Airline entrepreneur (b. 1899)
 
        -  April 5 -  Maurice Zbriger, Canadian violinist, composer and conductor (b. 1896)
 
        -  April 7 -  Norman Taurog, American film director (b. 1899)
 
        -  April 12 -  Joe Louis, American boxer (b. 1914)
 
        -  April 18 -  James H. Schmitz, German-born writer (b. 1911)
 
        -  April 27 -  John Aspinwall Roosevelt, American businessman and philanthropist (b. 1916)
 
       
       
        -  May 5 -  Bobby Sands, Irish republican (hunger strike) (b. 1954)
 
        -  May 9 -  Nelson Algren, American author (b. 1909)
 
        -  May 9 -  Ralph Allen, English footballer (b. 1906)
 
        -  May 11 -  Odd Hassel, Norwegian chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1897)
 
        -  May 11 - Bob Marley, Jamaican singer and musician (b. 1945)
 
        -  May 18 -  William Saroyan, American author (b. 1908)
 
        -  May 30 -  Don Ashby, Canadian ice hockey player (b. 1955)
 
        -  June 1 -  Carl Vinson, U.S. Congressman (b. 1883)
 
        -  June 2 -  Rino Gaetano, Italian singer-songwriter (b. 1950)
 
        -  June 9 -  Allen Ludden, American television game show host (b. 1917)
 
        -  June 10 -  Jenny Maxwell, American actress (b. 1941)
 
        -  June 17 - Sir Richard O'Connor, English general (b. 1889)
 
        -  June 17 -  Zerna Sharp, American writer and educator (b. 1889)
 
        -  June 18 -  Pamela Hansford Johnson, English poet, novelist, playwright, literary and social critic (b. 1912)
 
        -  June 19 -  Lotte Reiniger, German-born silhouette animator (b. 1899)
 
        -  June 23 -  Zarah Leander, Swedish actress and singer (b. 1907)
 
        -  June 28 -  Terry Fox, Canadian athlete and cancer activist (b. 1958)
 
       
       July-September
       
        -  July 8 -  Joe McDonnell, Irish political prisoner (b. 1951)
 
        -  July 16 -  Harry Chapin, American singer and songwriter (b. 1942)
 
        -  July 27 -  Adam Walsh, American murder victim, inspired  Code Adam (b. 1974)
 
        -  July 27 -  William Wyler, American movie director (b. 1902)
 
        -  July 29 -  Robert Moses, American urban planner (b. 1888)
 
        -  August 14 -  Karl Böhm, Austrian conductor (b. 1894)
 
        -  August 30 -  Vera-Ellen, American actress and dancer (b. 1921)
 
        -  September 1 -  Albert Speer, Nazi official (b. 1905)
 
        -  September 2 -  Enid Lyons, Australia politician (b. 1897)
 
        -  September 6 -  Christy Brown, Irish Author, Poet, and Artist (b. 1932)
 
        -  September 8 -  Hideki Yukawa, Japanese physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1907)
 
        -  September 9 -  Sir Robert (Bob) Askin, Premier of New South Wales (b. 1907)
 
        -  September 12 -  Eugenio Montale, Italian writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1896)
 
        -  September 15 -  Rafael Méndez, Mexican-born trumpet virtuoso (b. 1906)
 
        -  September 15 -  Harold Bennett, British actor (b. 1899)
 
        -  September 28 - Sir  Edward Boyle, Baron Boyle of Handsworth, British Conservative cabinet minister (b. 1923)
 
        -  September 29 -  Bill Shankly, British football manager (b. 1914)
 
       
       October-December
       
        -  October 2 -  Harry Golden, American journalist (b. 1902)
 
        -  October 6 -  Anwar Sadat,  President of Egypt, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (b. 1918)
 
        -  October 16 -  Stanley Clements, American actor (b. 1926)
 
        -  October 16 -  Moshe Dayan, Israeli general (b. 1915)
 
        -  October 29 -  Georges Brassens, French singer and songwriter (b. 1921)
 
       
       
        -  November 7 -  Will Durant, American philosopher and writer (b. 1885)
 
        -  November 14 -  Robert Bradford, Northern Irish footballer and politician (b. 1941)
 
        -  November 16 -  William Holden, American actor (b. 1918)
 
        -  November 22 -  Hans Adolf Krebs, German physician and biochemist, recipient of the  Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1900)
 
        -  November 25 -  Jack Albertson, American actor (b. 1907)
 
        -  November 29 -  Natalie Wood, American actress (b. 1938)
 
        -  December 3 -  Walter Knott, American farmer and theme park creator (b. 1889)
 
        -  December 15 -  Catherine T. MacArthur, American philanthropist (b. 1909)
 
        -  December 23 -  Reginald Miles Ansett, Australian businessman and aviator (b. 1909)
 
        -  December 27 -  Hoagy Carmichael, American jazz composer (b. 1899)
 
        -  December 28 -  Allan Dwan, Canadian-born film director (b. 1885)
 
        -  December 30 -  Alfie Anido, Filipino actor (b. 1959)
 
       
       Nobel prizes
       
        - Physics -  Nicolaas Bloembergen,  Arthur Leonard Schawlow,  Kai Siegbahn
 
        - Chemistry -  Kenichi Fukui,  Roald Hoffmann
 
        -  Medicine -  Roger Wolcott Sperry,  David H. Hubel,  Torsten Wiesel
 
        - Literature -  Elias Canetti
 
        - Peace -  United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
 
        -  Economics -  James Tobin
 
       
       Templeton Prize